| Literature DB >> 29164404 |
Dania Ahmed1, Ayaz Anwar2,3, Anum Khalid Khan4, Ayaz Ahmed5, Muhammad Raza Shah1, Naveed Ahmed Khan6.
Abstract
Biofilm formation by pathogenic bacteria is one of the major threats in hospital related infections, hence inhibiting and eradicating biofilms has become a primary target for developing new anti-infection approaches. The present study was aimed to develop novel antibiofilm agents against two Gram-positive bacteria; Staphylococcus aureus (ATCC 43300) and Streptococcus mutans (ATCC 25175) using gold nanomaterials conjugated with 3-(diphenylphosphino)propionic acid (Au-LPa). Gold nanomaterials with different sizes as 2-3 nm small and 9-90 nm (50 nm average size) large were stabilized by LPa via different chemical synthetic strategies. The nanomaterials were fully characterized using atomic force microscope (AFM), transmission electron microscope, ultraviolet-visible absorption spectroscopy, and Fourier transformation infrared spectroscopy. Antibiofilm activity of Au-LPa nanomaterials was tested using LPa alone, Au-LPa and unprotected gold nanomaterials against the both biofilm-producing bacteria. The results showed that LPa alone did not inhibit biofilm formation to a significant extent below 0.025 mM, while conjugation with gold nanomaterials displayed manifold enhanced antibiofilm potential against both strains. Moreover, it was also observed that the antibiofilm potency of the Au-LPa nanomaterials varies with size variations of nanomaterials. AFM analysis of biofilms further complemented the assay results and provided morphological aspects of the antibiofilm action of Au-LPa nanomaterials.Entities:
Keywords: 3-(diphenylphosphino)propanoic acid; AFM; Antibiofilm activity; Gold nanomaterials; S. aureus; S. mutans
Year: 2017 PMID: 29164404 PMCID: PMC5698236 DOI: 10.1186/s13568-017-0515-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AMB Express ISSN: 2191-0855 Impact factor: 3.298
Fig. 1UV–visible spectrum of Au-LPa nanomaterials. a Au-LPa large show surface plasmon resonance band at 524 nm. b Au-LPa small show characteristic absorption signal at 418 nm
Fig. 2Size and morphology of Au-LPa nanomaterials. a AFM image of Au-LPa large. b Size distribution histogram of Au-LPa large. c TEM image of Au-LPa small
Fig. 3FT-IR spectra of (a) ligand LPa, (b) Au-LPa large nanomaterials
Fig. 4a UV–Visible spectra showing no effect of pH on Au-LPa nanomaterials stability. b UV–visible spectrum for temperature tolerance of Au-LPa
Fig. 5Percent biofilm inhibition of Au-LPa (small and large size) against (a, b) S. aureus; (c, d) S. mutans. Statistical significance of the data was represented as *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01 and ***p < 0.001. Whereas * represent significance as compared to LPa and # represent as compared to gold nanomaterials alone (small or large size)
Fig. 6AFM topographic images of S. aureus biofilms; a biofilm untreated; b Au-LPa small treated; c Au-LPa large treated; d gold nanomaterials large control treated; e gold nanomaterials small control treated; f LPa alone treated
Fig. 7AFM topographic images of S. mutans biofilms; a biofilm untreated; b Au-LPa small treated; c Au-LPa large treated; d gold nanomaterials large control treated; e gold nanomaterials small control treated; f LPa alone treated